A magnetic levitation system for supporting an object against gravity by a supporting force includes a permanent-magnet dipole aligned in a vertical position and coupled to the object, a supporting-field generator and a stabilization system. The supporting-field generator generates a supporting force on the permanent-magnet dipole via a supporting field. The supporting field is a two-dimensional or three-dimensional magnetic quadrupole field so that the supporting force is independent of a position of the dipole. The stabilization system constrains the dipole against movements in at least one horizontal direction, and includes a diamagnetic element coupled to the dipole and arranged below the dipole, and a stabilizing-field generator generating a second two-dimensional or three-dimensional stabilizing field to restore said diamagnetic element to a position where the field strength of the stabilizing field has a local minimum.
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1. A magnetic levitation system for supporting an object against gravity by a supporting force, comprising:
a permanent-magnet dipole aligned in a vertical position and coupled to the object;
a supporting-field generator configured to generate a supporting force on the dipole via a supporting field, wherein the supporting field is a two-dimensional or three-dimensional magnetic quadrupole field so that the supporting force is independent of a position of the dipole; and
a stabilization system configured to constrain the dipole against movements in at least one horizontal direction, wherein the stabilization system comprises:
a diamagnetic element coupled to the dipole and arranged below the dipole;
a stabilizing-field generator generating a second two-dimensional or three-dimensional stabilizing field to restore the diamagnetic element to a position where the field strength of the stabilizing field has a local minimum.
10. A magnetic levitation system for supporting an object against gravity by a supporting force, comprising:
a permanent-magnet dipole aligned in a vertical position and coupled to the object;
a supporting-field generator including coils and configured to generate a supporting force on the dipole via a supporting field, the supporting field being a two-dimensional or three-dimensional magnetic quadrupole field so that the supporting force is independent of a position of the dipole, the coils of said supporting-field generator not having an iron core; and
a stabilization system configured to constrain the dipole against movements in at least one horizontal direction, the stabilization system including:
a diamagnetic element coupled to the dipole and arranged below the dipole;
a stabilizing-field generator generating a second two-dimensional or three-dimensional stabilizing field to restore the diamagnetic element to a position where the field strength of the stabilizing field has a local minimum.
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This invention relates to a magnetic levitation system.
For many applications a rigid body needs to be suspended while frictionless motion in at least one degree of freedom must be allowed without are storing force. The gravitational force acting on the body must be exactly compensated independent of the body's position. Examples: seismometer, inclinometer.
Many scientific instruments measure a force experienced by a mass. Examples: accelerometer, balance. One method to measure such a force is to convert the force as precisely as possible to an electrical signal like a voltage or a current that can be measured with digital meters.
Sometimes, a levitating body not only needs to be isolated from external forces but also must be housed in a closed vessel. This is for example the case, when the reaction of an aggressive gas with a sample material is studied using a balance to measure the mass of the reaction products. In such a case no sensitive mechanical or electronic parts can be placed inside the reaction vessel.
Mechanical suspension systems, utilizing pin or edge bearings, torsion wires, leaf springs, or the like, cause internal friction and forces being a function of position. Active magnetic bearings are bound up with strongly position dependent forces and need electric power, a disadvantage for mobile instruments. Passive magnetic bearings by means of superconductors are ideal in terms of low friction and are used successfully, e.g. for gravimeters. But the expense for cooling the superconductors is considerable.
A force to be measured can be converted to the extension or contraction of a spring. This method is based on the assumption of the spring constant being really constant. A piezoelectric sensor or any field of force with a constant gradient can be regarded as a <<spring>> in a wider sense. Such fields of force can for example be related to electric or magnetic fields acting on electric charges, magnetic dipoles, or a current carried by a conductor. A good alternative to the <<spring>> is given by a closed-loop servo system consisting of a position sensor, an amplifier, and an actuator holding the movable part in place by exactly compensating the force to be measured. The force output of the actuator corresponds to an electrical variable representing the force to be measured. Examples: the currents carried by either the rotating coil of a galvanometer or the moving coil of a voice-coil drive. The currents must be supplied to these coils by flexible leads or sliding contacts causing interfering forces and friction.
A sample in a closed vessel can be weighed with a so-called magnetic-suspension balance. A magnetic-suspension balance is simply a conventional balance carrying an electromagnet outside of the vessel. The electromagnet, controlled by a position transducer, is carrying the sample inside the vessel. The electromagnet acts as a tare weight and needs current leads responsible for additional forces disturbing the balance.
The present invention therefore addresses the problem to avoid the above-mentioned drawbacks of the known solutions. The task of the invention is to provide a magnetic levitation system—abbreviated by <<MAGLEV>>—for an object, which MAGLEV can easily solve the above mentioned technical problems.
The invention presented here is a particular type of passive magnetic levitation system characterized by a specific property of the force supporting the levitating object, i.e. the supporting force is independent of the levitating object's position, which property is equivalent to a zero <<spring constant>>. To solve the above mentioned technical problems the passive magnetic levitation system is supplemented with an active component. According to Earnshaw's theorem stable passive magnetic levitation cannot be achieved by permanent magnets alone. W. Braunbek, “Freischwebende Körper im Elektrischen und Magnetischen Feld,” Z. Phys., Vol. 112, 1939, pages 753-769, considered the problem of passive magnetic levitation at full length and proved in theory and by experiments that passive magnetic levitation is possible with the use of diamagnetic materials. Diamagnetic materials, characterized by their negative magnetic susceptibility, are repelled by permanent magnets. The effect of repulsion is very weak except for superconducting materials. Superconductors have a magnetic susceptibility of −1 in contrast to −1.7×10−4 for bismuth at room temperature. While the use of superconductors for magnetic levitation is already a common practice, applications of diamagnetic materials at room temperature are still scarce. Simon, M. D., Heflinger, L. O., and Geim, A. K., “Diamagnetically Stabilized Magnet Levitation,” Am. J. Phys., Vol. 69 (6), 2001, pages 702-713, have presented examples of how the bulk of gravity can be compensated by permanent magnets while diamagnetic repulsion is necessary for stabilization only.
The principle of pure, balloon like—i.e. position independent—compensation of gravity by a magnetic force and stabilization with a diamagnetic material is optimized with the invention presented here. The method starts with the design of a magnetic field for strict compensation of gravity. We are looking for a homogeneous field of force supporting a magnetic body independent of its position. In a Cartesian coordinate system with the vertical coordinate z and horizontal coordinates x and y the vertical force component Fz(x, y, z), i.e. the supporting force, must thus be constant. Let's consider the simple case of the supported body being a small magnetic dipole with vertically aligned axis and magnetic moment μ. If the vertical component of a magnetic field is Bz(x, y, z) the dipole experiences a force with the vertical component
Integrating this equation we find Bz(x, y, z)=B0z+C·z with constants B0z and
In a vortex-free region of space the magnetic field must be a solution of Laplace's equation:
Replacing
using the first derivative of the above equation for Bz we get an equation for the horizontal components of the magnetic field vector:
Two simple solutions of this equation are known as quadrupole fields. The first being the two-dimensional quadrupole field:
Bx=0,By=−C·y,Bz=C·z
The second being the three-dimensional quadrupole field:
Both kinds of quadrupole fields can be utilized to support a magnetic dipole. The two-dimensional quadrupole field is suitable for applications needing free motions either parallel to the horizontal x-axis or in a vertical plane parallel to x/z. In addition free rotation around a vertical axis parallel to z is possible. In contrast the three-dimensional quadrupole field only permits free translational movements parallel to the vertical z-axis and/or free rotation around an axis parallel to z.
The working principle of the invention will now be described in further details with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein:
The following addresses how a quadrupole field can be approximated with permanent magnets. The simplest way to accomplish a two-dimensional quadrupole field is by utilizing two long bars 1 of rectangular cross section magnetized perpendicularly to their longitudinal axes. The two bars 1 are mounted with axes parallel and equal poles face to face, see
The following addresses how a quadrupole field can be approximated with coils carrying electric currents. A well known configuration generating a good approximation of a three-dimensional quadrupole field is named anti-Helmholtz coils 3. Anti-Helmholtz coils 3, depicted in
The following addresses why a dipole supported by a quadrupole field needs to be stabilized with a diamagnetic material and how stabilization is achieved. A dipole magnet 4 aligned perfectly with the vertical z-axis of a quadrupole field is supported in an indifferent fashion similar to a balloon supported by buoyancy of air. But if the dipole is allowed to rotate around a horizontal axis then a horizontal instability will arise. To explain this instability the dipole is shown symbolically in
for two-dimensional and three-dimensional quadrupole fields respectively. The torque τ rotates the dipole around the horizontal x-axis, perpendicular to the page. As a consequence, the opposite forces acting on the charges are no longer balanced which results in a force Fy parallel to the y-axis, see
A system with a diamagnetic cylinder 8 centered in a two-dimensional quadrupole field is demonstrated in
The following addresses how oscillation damping can be accomplished to suit a given application. Oscillations of a mass suspended without friction can be a problem for some applications. Oscillations can be damped effectively by means of eddy currents. It is possible to selectively damp specific degrees of freedom. In most cases it is recommended to damp all the motions restricted already by a particular stabilization system. These are all the motions characterized by a nonzero <<spring constant>> equivalent to a restoring force. Oscillation damping is not necessary for <<free motions>> in the sense of the previous paragraph because a zero spring constant corresponds to an infinite oscillation period. For some applications however damping a motion with a zero spring constant makes sense. A balance is an example opposite to a vibration transducer. The obvious way to realize eddy current damping is by using the magnetic field required for diamagnetic stabilization. Eddy currents can be generated within the diamagnetic material 8 itself if it is conductive like metallic bismuth. As shown in
In order to simply suspend or guide a movable part of a mechanism, the movable part is attached to a small dipole magnet 4 supported by a quadrupole field, which is generated by permanent magnets. Depending on the degrees of freedom needed, stabilization is accomplished by one of the configurations proposed in
To measure the force acting on a movable part of an apparatus the movable part is suspended by one of the methods described in the previous paragraph <<3 Working principle of the invention>>. The particular method is selected to allow a free motion in the direction of the force to be measured. To complete a closed-loop servo system, as described in paragraph <<2 Traditional solutions for the mentioned technical problems>> lit b), an actuator is needed. The obvious solution is to use a quadrupole field acting on a dipole magnet 4 to generate the compensating force. This quadrupole field is not generated by permanent magnets but by anti-Helmholtz coils 3 carrying an electric current. This current is, independent of the movable part's position, exactly proportional to the compensating force and hence to the force to be measured. In other words, the supporting force is a linear function of this current. If the force to be measured is vertically directed then the dipole magnet of the actuator can be identical with the dipole used to levitate the moving part. A vertically aligned dipole 4 in a quadrupole field does not experience a horizontal force. An additional horizontal dipole must therefore be attached to the movable part if a horizontal force must be compensated and measured. A schematic view of a magnetic-suspension balance utilizing the above working principle is presented in
The nonmagnetic wall of a closed vessel 21 can easily be fitted between permanent magnets and/or anti-Helmholtz coils outside and a levitating mass inside. The floating dipole magnet can be enclosed, if necessary, in a protecting glass ampoule. Equipped in this way a magnetic-suspension balance, as described in paragraph b), can be used to solve the problems exemplified in section c) of paragraph <<1. Technical problems to be solved utilizing the invention>>.
The invention and their preferred embodiments presented here have the following benefits as compared to mechanical suspension systems:
The invention and their preferred embodiments have four merits over conventional active magnetic-bearing systems:
Passive magnetic levitation with superconductors has two disadvantages as compared to stabilization with weakly diamagnetic materials:
The invention and their preferred embodiments have the following advantages over earlier passive magnetic levitation systems with weakly diamagnetic materials:
Horizontal stabilization is rather achieved by mutual attraction of dipole poles and pole pieces above and below the levitating dipole magnet. As a consequence of this horizontal centering action a vertical instability is expected. This instability must be compensated by means of the closed-loop servo system included in the configuration. U.S. Pat. No. 3,493,275 is suffering from the disadvantages of all ordinary active magnetic-levitation systems, hysteresis for example.
A balance based on the invention and their preferred embodiments have three benefits as compared to commercially available micro balances:
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